Most GPs assume a placement agent is the default way to raise institutional capital. It's one option among several, and for a lot of emerging and mid-market managers, it's not the option whose cost structure actually fits the fund being raised.
A placement agent typically charges a retainer in the US$15,000–US$50,000 per month range, plus a success fee of roughly 1.5–2.5% on capital raised, plus a tail provision — meaning the fee obligation can extend 12 to 24 months past the end of the actual engagement. For a large, established manager running a multi-billion-dollar raise, that structure is proportionate. For an emerging manager raising a smaller fund, the same structure can mean paying a meaningful fee on capital the placement agent didn't necessarily source, for well over a year after the relationship ends.
That's not a knock on placement agents — full-lifecycle fundraising support has real value, particularly for complex, cross-border raises. It's a mismatch-of-fit problem: the model was built around a scale of raise that most emerging and mid-market GPs aren't running.
A few honest questions cut through this faster than a generic pros-and-cons list. How much of your own LP network already exists versus needs to be built from nothing? How complex is the geographic reach you need — a handful of relationships in your home market, or genuinely global distribution across regions you have no presence in? How urgent is the timeline — do you need capital committed on a fixed schedule, or can you build a durable LP base over multiple fund cycles? A GP with some existing network, a domestic or regionally-focused strategy, and no hard deadline has a very different calculus than a GP raising a large, complex fund from a standing start.
Hiring in-house investor relations gives you full control but means carrying a senior salary before you know how productive that hire will be, and building a network from scratch takes years, regardless of who's doing it. A flat-fee, sustained LP introduction program — which is what PCD's Concierge service is — sits between these: a fixed monthly retainer, no success fee, no tail, with introductions made under our own name, and the relationships are yours from the first confirmed meeting forward.
Without a firm managing the full lifecycle on your behalf, three things fall to you: a genuinely well-targeted list (not just a database export), a steady source of new introductions rather than a one-time push, and the discipline to run the resulting pipeline instead of letting meetings go cold. None of these are exotic. All three are easy to describe and surprisingly hard to sustain consistently while also running a fund — which is usually where "raising without a placement agent" actually breaks down, not in the initial decision to skip one.
If you're running a large, complex, or genuinely global raise with no existing LP relationships anywhere, a placement agent's full-lifecycle model may be worth its cost. If you're an emerging or mid-market manager with some network already and a raise sized in a way that a multi-year tail provision would eat disproportionately into, the math usually points elsewhere.
You don't need a placement agent to raise a fund. You need a steady stream of new conversations, and the discipline to work the pipeline once it's moving.
PCD's Concierge service is built for exactly that gap — flat monthly retainer, no success fee, no tail, introductions made under your own name. If you're weighing a placement agent against building this yourself, get in touch for a second read on the math.